The blood is part of the Circulatory System, which includes the heart, lungs, arteries, veins, kidneys, liver and spleen. Here is a good photo, (but leaves out the spleen): http://www.daviddarling.info/images/circulatory_system.jpg
Ia Ib
Blood type D is not one of the four main blood type groups. There is a D antigen that is part of the Rh antigen system, but there is not a blood type group called blood type D.
In the ABO system, it is O blood type that contains no surface antigens.
Body system
Blood type A has anti-B antibodies in its plasma. This means that individuals with type A blood can react against type B blood cells, as their immune system recognizes the B antigens as foreign. Therefore, type A blood is compatible for transfusion with type A and type O blood, but not with type B or AB blood.
No , cnidarians don't have blood .They lack any type of circulatory system .
Yes, "C" is a blood group antigen but not a specific blood type. Blood types refer to the ABO system (A, B, AB, O) and the Rh system (positive or negative). The "C" antigen is part of the Rh system.
Blood type B negative has antibodies against blood type A antigens. This means that individuals with blood type B negative should not receive blood transfusions with type A or AB blood since their immune system will recognize these blood types as foreign and mount an immune response against them.
Individuals with blood type A positive have antibodies against blood type B antigens. This means their immune system reacts against blood from individuals with blood type B if they were to receive a transfusion containing type B blood.
A blood type converter is used to determine the compatibility of blood types for transfusions. It works by converting blood types from one system (such as ABO) to another system (such as Rh factor) to ensure safe and successful transfusions.
blood type proteins are found on the surface of the red blood cells that are like id tags
In the ABO blood group system, blood type A is considered to be dominant over blood type O. This means that if an individual inherits one allele for type A from one parent and one allele for type O from the other, their blood type will be A. Blood type B is also dominant over type O, while blood type AB is considered co-dominant, expressing both A and B antigens.